BYOD Gadgets Bloom Thanks To Crowd Funding

Romo is a mobile dock for smartphones that you control with another smart phone or other device, such as an iPad, or a Web browser. Crowd funding sites like Kickstarter and Indiegogo have made it easier to get a hardware startup off the ground.

Hardware projects can raise a lot of money on Kickstarter, and much of the hardware talks to smartphones or tablets in one way or another. The popularity of tablets and smartphones and crowd-funding sites like Kickstarter give hardware startups a chance to blossom.

There is no one single force driving this trend. Hardware does well on crowdfunding sites. The spread of tablets makes it possible to build new things controlled by and even incorporating them. Electric motors have improved. Wireless connectivity of various types can now be taken for granted. It's getting more straightforward to get things manufactured. Arduinos, 3D printing, laser cutters, and more accessible CNC milling are making hardware easier to prototype. Retailers are less of a bottleneck as customers increasingly buy online.

Romotive is back for a second round of Kickstarter funding, to refine its "BYOD robot"--a mobile dock and application for smartphones called Romo. The founders of Romotive came out of TechStars Seattle this fall. The team spent four months building 2,000 Romos by hand, just in time for Christmas. Then it set up the production line in China.

Three robots came off the production line.

Romotive's promotional video, below, shows a docked phone in a Romo scooting along desks and floors, interacting with people and pets. The base and app add to smart phones autonomous navigation, remote two-way telepresence, and facial recognition.

Instead of using focus groups, Jen S McCabe, head of operations and business development at Romotive, said, "Kickstarter backers are the best beta testers on the planet."

Romo had 755 backers at last count who contributed from $150 to $500 apiece. Each backer will receive some version of Romo. The campaign still has 21 days to go, but already has reached its funding goal.

Pairing robotic devices with smartphones is a business "no brainer," said McCabe. "Devices are like the new Duracell for mobile hardware companies."

The Romo can dock any of the following: iPhone 4, iPhone 4S, or iPod Touch 4th Generation. The Romo can be controlled with an iPod Touch 3rd Generation and up, iPhone 4, iPhone 4S, iPhone 5, iPhone 3GS, iPad 2, new iPad, any Mac running OS 10.6 or later, and Web browsers. The device's battery can last for eight hours, and it recharges via USB.

Watch the video:

I can see a real benefit of being able to use the Romo to work remotely and navigate the office--although it's not quite clear, because it's so low to the ground, that others in your office will notice the Romo. Evernote's co-founder Phil Libin uses a much larger robot to roam the Evernote office.

Willow Garage's Steve Cousins once told me that every person in the future would have a robot and that open-source software would drive it forward. Now that smartphones and tablets are common in households and the workplace, the robot dream might not seem so crazy after all--and at $150 for a BYOD robot, well, that's pretty reasonable.

Among 688 respondents, 46% have deployed mobile apps, with an additional 24% planning to in the next year. Soon all apps will look like mobile apps – and it's past time for those with no plans to get cracking.